"And then we, like, ran out of Elvis movies."
This time, TNT was showing neither an ad nor a promotion for an Elvis movie.
He then went on to speculate he would like to make a sequel documenting the production of a 'lost' Elvis movie from the 1950s or 1960s.
It starts like this: "There's an Elvis movie on the marquee sign / We've all seen at least three times."
Rooms have a 1950's feel, and TV's play Elvis movies continuously.
In his prjis--1i stripes, he looked like an extra from an Elvis movie.
The only Elvis movie to have a subtitle in its name, it is an odd mixture of music, comedy, and melodrama.
Each story typically spoofs a film genre, such as the "Cinderella" episode done as an Elvis movie.
Elvis movies run continuously on a big screen, their sound tracks muted as Elvis tunes are piped over the speakers.
So formulaic that his output has been called "Elvis movies", and a genre unto themselves.